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Modeling Conflict: Representations of Social Groups in Present-Day Dutch Literature

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Modeling Conflict: Representations of Social Groups in Present-Day Dutch Literature

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Abstract

This essay responds to a lack of scholarly attention for conflict as a narrative mechanism since the formalist models of Vladimir Propp and Algirdas Julien Greimas. Building on recent developments within cultural analytics, the essay argues for a new understanding of narrative conflict by integrating classic narratological models with data-driven, statistical methods. It does so by (a) proposing two computational models of conflict based on theoretical insights from narratology, conflict studies, and network theory, (b) applying those models to a sample corpus of 170 present-day Dutch novels, and (c) briefly illustrating the narratological value of the results by interpreting the representation of social groups in two novels from the corpus – Bart Koubaa’s De Brooklynclub (2012) and Leon de Winter’s VSV (2012) – in light of the statistical patterns found for the corpus as a whole. The analyses of dyadic (two characters) and triadic (three characters) conflict leads to two central conclusions: 1) lower educated characters are more dominant in dyadic conflicts and 2) the majority of triadic conflicts exist in a state of social balance.

How to Cite:

Smeets, R., De Pourcq, M. & van den Bosch, A., (2021) “Modeling Conflict: Representations of Social Groups in Present-Day Dutch Literature”, Journal of Cultural Analytics 6(3). https://doi.org/10.22148/001c.24722 (external link, opens in new tab).

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